Business
‘Multiple Regulations, Dangerous For Oil industry’
The Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) and the Niger Delta Exploration and Production Plc (NDEP) have said that the rising cases of multiple regulations in the oil and gas industry are a recipe for disaster.
The Director, DPR, Mr. Osten Olorunsola, and the Managing Director, NDEP Plc, Dr. Layi Fatona, lamented that many government agencies had imposed regulatory oversight on the oil and gas industry under the guise of being environmental or maritime regulators, among others.
This development, the two experts warned, would not augur well for the industry even after the Petroleum Industry Bill had been passed.
Fatona, the NDEP boss who was one of the panellists at a session organised by the Petroleum Technology Association of Nigeria, feared that the PIB, when passed into law, would create an unprecedented number of regulatory authorities in the oil and gas industry.
He said, “But I want to sound a note of warning, we are seeing the creeping-in of micro regulators into the oil and gas industry and this will only lead to high cost of operations. This is not particularly good for the small indigenous operators in the country.”
According to him, activities of some Federal and state ministries of environment, commerce, and the Nigerian Nuclear Regulatory Authority, among others, amount to multiple regulation in the oil and gas industry.
Olorunisola, the DPR director, who lent credence to Fatona’s position, noted that it was true that people had, over the time, entered the oil and gas industry ‘from the back door either disguising themselves as environmental or marine regulator.
“It is a recipe for disaster to have too many regulators in any industry,” he said, stressing,
”It’s an area that still has to be looked into not just as it affects Nigeria but looking at the bench mark across the world.
“Apart from this, one thing that international investors look for is the robustness, simplicity and the transparency of your regulation and the National Assembly is aware of that and I think they will look at it.
“However, in looking at it, we also need to be mindful of our peculiarity as a nation. The mere fact that it is just only one operator elsewhere does not mean that we cannot have two or three in Nigeria. The only thing is that it has to work and it doesn’t have to become a bureaucracy.”